PAGE SIX THE BEND BULLETIN, BEND. OREGON THURSDAY, MARCH 30, 1950 Camp Cookery Club Organized Redmond, March 30 (Special) Pat Peden, acting as leader, or ganized a camp cookery club at a group meeting at his home Sat. urday, March 25. Glen Ferguson. Wesley, Darrell and Wilbur Wool hiser, Larry Peden and Lloyd and Ivan Uphoff became members. Officers elected at the meeting were Larry Peden, president ; Wesley Woolhlser, vice-president; Lloyd Uphoff, secretary, and Pat Peden, leader. The next meeting will be at the home of the Wool hlser boys on April 6. On that date plans for (he year will be set up. Mrs. Mary McDaniel and C. W McDanlel and family went to the Upland ranch on Mill creek to spend Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Chick Peden were Prineville business callers Tues day. Mr. and Mrs. Andrew 0. Holm from Sunnvside, Wash., arrived in Redmond Wednesday to visit their daughter. Miss Margaret Holm, senior English Instructor at Red mond Union high school. They will attend the music contest at Prineville over the week end with Miss Holm, who will have several students participating. Miss Holm win accompany her parents home on Saturday lo spend spring va. cation. M. E. Larive, superintendent at Redmond Union high school, and Miss Ruby Stephenson are mak ing arrangements for the possible entry of the Redmond girls' drill team in the Rose Festival parade Miss Ruby' Stephenson, girls' pnysical education director, win spend the spring vacation in Port land. ' Twirlers entered in the district contest at Prineville this week end are Doris Osenton. Shirley Amen Shirley Jones, Darlene Fields, Sharon Moran, Ellen Stacy. The girls will perform Saturday. Miss Margaret Hook will go to Portland Thursday afternoon to spend the spring vacation. Miss Barbara Berg, who is teaching in Pendleton, will come to Redmond to spend the week end with her sister, Miss Virginia Berg. Miss Barbara Berg was a member of the high school facul ty last year. Mr. and Mrs. G. F. Summers and daughter, De Loris, have moved' to Terrebonne to make their home. The Summers had been living near Alfalfa. Mr. and Mrs. Ray Bessey and daughter, Joan, visited friends at Gateway Sunday. Howard Carver, of Myrtle Point was a week-end visitor at the home of his mother-in-law, Mrs. L. A. Hartford, of Tumalo. He left for his home Tuesday. Mrs. Glen Shortreed compli mented her daughter, Ardyee, at a birthday dinner Tuesday night. Guests were A. Swift who shared honors with Ardyce; Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Day and children, Lca rae' and Louise, and the other members of the A. Swift family. Lorraine and Arlo Dunbar are spending the week in Eugene vis iting relatives. Mrs. William Orlebeke went to Portland Monday on business. They returned Tuesday. Mr. and Mrs. Dale Clarambeau, who had been living in the Stacy apartments, arc moving this week to McMlnnville. Clarambeau has been working at Morris-Nelson's. Girls who have announced their j intentions of dying out for the honor of representing Redmond at the Shrine rodeo in Portland are Darlene Fields, Donna Milli. ken and Joyce Van Made. The girls were to be judged today on their horsemanship, by members of the Redmond SndrNe club. A committee from (he Shrine club will complete Ihe judging, using poise and personality as qualifications. Miss Redmond Contest Planned Redmond, March 30- -The hoard of directors of (he Redmond chamber of commerce has decided that Ihe chamber will sponsor a 1950 Miss Redmond contest. At the chamber meeting on Tuesday President W. H. Stauffaeher ap pointed C. E. Thompson chair man of the committee to arrange for the event. Other members of the committee are Lester Houk, Roy Newell, Jay Sliively, Darrell Smith and Walter Lantz. Harold Clapp made a report on the inspection of the team of armv engineers, who were con sidering land near Redmond for a national air academy. J. R. Rob erts made a brief report on Ihe air search for the plane lost some where between Lakeview and Portland. An announcement was made at the chamber meeting that a rep resentative of the legislative in terim committee on slate high- Tumalo Reservoir (Continued from Page 1) Ihe fissures race miniature rivers of water. One escaping stream ap peared to be moving into the base of Davis mountain, an old volcano that overlooks the. Wickiup coun try. bureau engineers outlined a sealing procedure, and in the 1948 and 19-19 season etlectlveiy seated the leaks. Wickiup reservoir is now filled to capacity, and there is evidence that losses under the extreme water loaj are light. Data Required Foley and members of his chamber committee decided that a study of the possibility of seal ing (he Tumalo leaks should be undertaken, to determine whether Ihe same sealing methods used in the Wickiup basin would be feas ible in the old Tumalo basin. However, before such work could be undertaken, or funds for the wavs will be in Redmond on April i project sought, data was required 25. to present an overall picture. as lo water loss and leakage of the state highway system. The i zones. It is this study that is now report will be made at a meeting j under way. to be held at Westminster hall on I Because of the lateness of the April 25 from 10 a.m. until 12 season, only dala (hat can be ob tained tins year prooably win be information relative to the loss of water through the reservoir floor. It is recalled (hat when a test storage was made some 20 years ago, (he major loss of water appeared to be into fissures along the eas( side of the reservoir. At one point, water raced into a wide fissure with a roaring sound. Tried Once Before Years ago, an attempt was made (o seal (he fissures through a method that would be consider ed crude in view of the Wickiup sealing work. At the Tumalo res ervoir, boxes of dynamite, wi(h lighted fuses attached, were drift ed into the side fissures and ex ploded. It was hoped that the un derground explosions would block the fissures, but this was not the case. At present, about 70 second feet of water is pouring in(o (he up per reservoir of the Tumalo basin from the Tumalo creek diversion canal. This basin is now filled, j and the estimated outflow, Info a ! creek connecdng the upper and : lower reservoirs, is about 50 see-; ond feet. However, only about 30 1 second feet is reaching the lower' Hannah Londahl Dies at Tacoma Word has been received here of the dead! on March 22 in Ta coma, Wash., of Hannah Ander son Lor.dahl, 73, wife of Rev. M. M. Londahl, retired army chaplain and former resident of Bend. Rev. and Mrs. Londahl lived in Bend from 1928 to 1932. while Rev. Londahl was pastor of the First Lutheran church in this city. Aside from her husband Mrs. Londahl is survived by four sons. Edmund, of Tacoma; Cyrus, of Lodi, Calif.; Marvin, of Monterey, Calif., and Maj. John Londahl. of Fort Lcwfe; a daughter, Mrs. Ruth Kurdick, of Tacoma, and a sister, Miss Selma Anderson. Mrs. Londahl was a native of Deer, Park, Wis. Maj. Londahl, one of Ihe sur viving sons, is an ex-Universi(y of Oregon foo(ball star and Red mond and Bend football coach. Services were held on Satur day, in the Immanuel Lutheran church, of Centralia, Wash. reservoir, and there is apparently a further loss in that basin. Prac tically all of (his loss is into res ervoir floor fissures, not the side fissures, which are well above Ihe present water lino. Despite the extensive water loss, two lakes now occupy Ihe Tumalo reservoir basin. Close to (he eastern Cascades, these man made lakes reflect the while out- lines of (he Three Sisters. Constructed by the state of Oregon Ihe Tumalo reservoir, a project on which work officially starled on June 20, 1913, was (he first undertaking of its kind by any state in the union: It was constructed under a $450,000 ap propriation from the Oregon gen eral fund. O. Laurgaard was con struction engineer. Hundreds of men, paid $2.20 a day in 1914, with S4.00 a day offered for man and (earn, were employed, with nine different camps established. Two dams, one 70 feet high and the other 25 feet, were constructed in the basin. Big Area Involved The project contemplated Ihe irrigation of 22.500 acres in the Tumalo communily. When it be came apparent that the Tumalo reservoir would not hold water, the irrigable acreage was dras tically slashed. The district now stores water in (he Crescent lake basin, and also used part of the Tumalo creek flow. Water from Tumalo creek is taken into the Tumalo reservoir basin through a seven-mile canal. Some reclamationists fear that soil stripping in connection with the construction' of "the Tumalo dam nullified any possibility of effective sealing work. When this first was removed, underlying fis sures possibly were exposed over a wide area. In the Wickiup basin, deep top soil, pumice and gravels covered the hidden fissures. Planned capacity of the Tum alo reservoir is 20,000 acre feet. . Cranberries, once entirely a wild crop, have now been culti vated for about 100 years. SALES SERVICE ELECTROLUX Cleaner & Air Purifier PHIL PHILBROOK Only Authorized Dealer 1S04 E, Third, Phone 1293-T Navy Checking Sub Periscope San Francisco, March 30 UPi The navy announced, today one of its patrol planes has sighted an "unidentified submarine peris cope" and patrol bombers and a. destroyer were dispatched to search an area off Eureka, Caht., near the California-Oregon border. The commander of Ihe western sea frontier said the patrol plane sighted Ihe periscope yesterday afternoon about 2 p.m. Early to day, a fishing vessel from Trini dad harbor, near Lureka, report ed to tlie coast guard It saw an ; unidentified submarine in the area. The navy confirmed an air-sea j search was underway. ' The area where (he sub slghl-, ing occurred is approximately the j same part of Ihe California coast- j line where unidentified subma-' rines were seen last January bv I an ex-RAF pilot. Another Bell Ringer SPECIAL! Hanging Copper WALL PLANTS each 59c (Now on display in our window) Symons Bros,, Jewelers "The House of Beauty" WRONG I'LAl'K AND TIME Dunn, N.C. ll'i Nclll McCray picked the wrong place and time to play Peeping Tom. The place was the home of former Police Sgt. C. E. Moore. The time was when Moore came home without his door key and circled to the bedroom window to ask his wife lo let him In. An inveslment of $5,000 lo S20.- 000 is required for machinery for tne modern mechanized larm of average size. Skinny men, women gain 5, 10, 15 lbs. Get New Pep, Vim. Vigor Wlit ft thrill! nony limtn fill nut: URly hnllnm nil tin: liwl no Icmurr sri-HUiii': ImhIv Ih-hi Imlf. elsrvnl, Richly " Uun-ple" look, 't timmmiil o( i firm. Konifti, mm. who never coiiitl muii brriire. lint lie c n mm blood Inrkrd Iron, urn now proud oi Hlimwller, hrnltlilr-r-lookliiK noillra. They thrttik nvrrv i nni mm iron you. ion, may ntva nrt.li, rnnri) ui You mure dlrrii hum Initio. Alt to iiMn iimivo nmwniA mi tntxl nlvm mure Mir nuih nttif mtiirlsfmirm ; pula flcwi no Vltmiiln III. minimi I).. n't fnp luiimn t-,1 Hli'H tnklnn nt nny tlm IT yon urn Nniin1 witli Inrrca-i'tl wrinht, new pen and viuor. I iik little. IntriMliirtnry ttlie only t,oo. Try fnmnti nm Touio Tablet fur new Douudu, new pvu, TODAY, At all drug tore everywhere In fiend, at liend Drug Co. An"v. r woo",. j ICONOMICAl - - 'SSk : r DELICIOUS .-, ( 'jfl S HEALTHFUL Tfi 7? j 3 Nourishing j V - rig e Casy to K) -iim Silver Jubilee SALE ENDS APRIL 1ST! ' BEG. SALE REARVIEW MIRROR.... 89c 69c WHEEL SPiNNER. ...... 69c 57c CLOTHES PINS. . . . pkg. 29c 19c 36 to a 1'aekiiKe POLISH CLOTH ...24c 18c FLASHLIGHT 1.45 89c WASH MITT...... 59c 49c n.ASTIC SEAT COVERS ..... 9.95 to 22.95 POCKET WATCH 1.79 I'lti.s Tax rOTTON CLOTHES LINE ROPE. . . 49c 39c 'OWN nnd C'Ol'XTKV 5-Tl'BE PORTABLE RADIO 39.95 Plus Kectlfler also o BELL RINGER SPECIAL 1'iki:ki; COFFEE MUGS. . each 8c HI5 Wall Street Iteml, Oregon Plump 47(1 Every where... People Are Say in j..; lUll "Everybody Like Hills Bros. Coffee." I (jfjTftt I WKUiai uiiiiu Ti W- Your best buy in coffee is the one that everyone enjoys most. Rich, satisfying Hills Bros. Coffee is a blend of the finest cof fees grown. "Controlled Roasting," an exclusive Hills Bros, process, roasts the blend a little at a time continuously for uniform flavor-perfection. It's vacuum-packed for freshness. TWO GRINDS: ; TMdimMkl Rff. O.S. PaL Off. Copyillht 19U Kills Bin. CoHtfl. Inc. Dtip and Glass-Maker Grind QB.F. (Sr 0Dn)(rilB?iLsM CHECK YOUR SIZE HERE FOR B. F. GOODRICH SILVERT0WNS , SIZE REG. PRICE SALE PRICE SALE PRICE (4-ply) ONE TIRE TWO TIRES YOU SAVE FOUR TIRIS YOU SAVE Black (PLUS TAX) (PLUS TAX) (PLUS TAX) 6.00-16 15.80 27.95 3.65 53.95 9.25 6.50-15 19.05 33.95 4.15 65.95 10.25, 6.50-16 19.45 34.45 4.45 67.25 10.55 6.70-15 18.10 31.95 4.25 61.95 10.45' 6.70-16 18.25 32.15 4.35 62.45 10.55 7.10-15 20.10 35.75 4.45 69.20 11.20 Above prices include your old fires. Savings on all other sizes, too. SALE ENDS APRIL 15 KM I or Set "Right's Right at Eddie's" ACT NOW! J trade fires Today; and SAVE! Eddie's Sales & Service CHRYSLER PLYMOUTH Greenwood and Wall Phone &4 tjriihead;quarters VIC FLINT By Michael O'Mallev and Ralph Lane iy,1!0.00 V0U )( W 5IGRIt SWEDEN WANTED SOME PIONO- tSSSSSWB W VnU NTnRSTIGRID ? I GBAPH RECORDS TO PRACTICE SKATING WITH" W At TniillUrW 1 1 J, -Jy, tROM THE VIENNA ' ( TINS YOU SO f VJ Z? ' . ' , 11 i